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Metrics and the BGP Peers Function

Netdata collects BGP state per peer from your routers over SNMP, and presents it as live charts plus an interactive table.

Charts

BGP metrics appear in three groups:

  • snmp.bgp.peers.* — per peer: connection state and availability, established uptime, session transitions and flaps, message traffic, negotiated and configured timers, and the time since the peer's last update.
  • snmp.bgp.peer_families.* — per address family (AFI/SAFI), where the device reports it: connection state, availability, established uptime, traffic, established transitions, update-recency, and timers, plus the prefix and route metrics — counts (received, accepted, active, advertised, rejected, suppressed, withdrawn), route totals, and configured route limits. Prefix counts live at this scope, not at the per-peer level, and only on devices that expose per-family route tables.
  • snmp.bgp.devices.* — device-level totals: peer counts and peer-state counts.

The standard BGP4-MIB covers the core per peer — peer state, uptime, transitions, the updates and messages counters, and last-update age. Vendor BGP MIBs add more where the device exposes it: some carry a fuller per-message traffic breakdown (notifications, route-refresh, open, keepalive), and the entire per-address-family scope (snmp.bgp.peer_families.*), including the route counts and limits, comes from vendor MIBs. Diagnostic detail — the last error, down reason, and graceful-restart state — is shown in the snmp:bgp-peers function rather than as charts.

The snmp:bgp-peers function

Open snmp:bgp-peers on a router for a sortable, filterable table of every peer — served from already-collected data, with no extra requests to the device. Each row shows the neighbor and remote AS, admin and connection state, established uptime, last-update age, updates sent and received, prefixes accepted and advertised, and the last error, down reason, and graceful-restart state.

Use the view parameter to choose what each row represents:

  • peers (default) — one row per BGP peer.
  • peer_families — one row per peer per address family (AFI/SAFI), carrying the per-family route counts and limits.
  • all — peers and families together in one table.

Every column sorts and filters, so you can sort by last-update age to surface up-but-stale peers, or filter to a single remote AS.

Spotting "Established but stale"

The most useful combination is connection state + last-update age: a peer that is Established while its last-update age keeps climbing has quietly stopped receiving routes. Sort the table by last-update age to surface these before they bite.

Alerts

Netdata ships seven stock BGP alerts that raise on their own — route them to your channels as you would any Netdata alert:

  • Peer down and peer-family down — a session that should be up has left Established.
  • Transition anomaly, for peers and for peer families — an unusual rate of established-state flapping, caught by Netdata's ML anomaly detection.
  • Update anomaly, for peers and for peer families — abnormal update-message churn, a sign of route instability.
  • Accepted-prefix anomaly — an unexpected change in a peer family's accepted-prefix count, surfacing route loss or a sudden flood.

What's next

  • Overview — what BGP monitoring covers and which devices.

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